CHAPTER SIX
‘‘Nearly half of them have confirmed.’’ Strike
went down the list. ‘‘We’ve got flight info for Alexis Gray, along
with Coyote-Seven and Patience Lizbet, and their winikin , one of which is a substitute, so we can
shift manpower over to Nathan Blackhawk when the time
comes.’’
He and Jox were sitting on lounge chairs out on
the pool deck of the mansion, while the cleanup continued around
them. They’d been at the training compound in New Mex for a week
now, and after few days of DIY had sucked it up and used the
Nightkeeper Fund to hire a couple of local crews to strip the junk
and update the facilities. Granted, it would’ve been better to keep
the place out of the public eye, but that just hadn’t been
feasible. Besides, with the traffic they were expecting starting in
the next few days, it would’ve been pretty tough to keep the place
a secret for long.
So far, none of the workers had mentioned the
little detail that there hadn’t been any buildings in the out-of
-the-way box canyon up until a week ago, yet the place clearly
dated back to the turn of the twentieth century and showed a couple
decades’ worth of neglect. Either the locals didn’t know about the
compound’s appear-disappear -reappear routine, or they’d decided
the generous pay made up for the freak factor.
‘‘Carlos is a good man,’’ Jox said. ‘‘A good
winikin. He’ll help Blackhawk
adjust.’’
That had been the first bit of bad news after the
initial buzz of learning about the survivors: At least one of their
winikin hadn’t lived long.
Jox’s list was twenty-four years old, garnered
from notes dropped to a P.O. box in Shiprock, a few hundred miles
north of the compound. As per the escape protocol drilled into each
winikin at maturity, they’d left basic
contact information and a confirmation word, and then gone
underground and found their way into regular society, focusing on
the child—or children—they’d saved. They’d modernized the young
Nightkeepers’ names to make mainstreaming easier—the smoke, lizard,
and harvester bloodlines had become the surnames Gray, Lizbet, and
Farmer for the females. Among the males, Coyote-Seven had been
shortened to Sven, while Blackhawk, White-Eagle, and Stone had been
common enough surnames that they’d stayed as they were.
Through the magic of Google and a private
investigator named Carter, a friend of a friend of Jox’s who would
cheerfully hack into the IRS database for a hefty fee, they’d found
current addresses for almost all of the survivors. Unfortunately,
they also learned that the winikin to the
sole survivor of the hawk bloodline had succumbed to his wounds
within a few days of escaping from the boluntiku. His charge had wound up in the foster
system with no clue who—or what—he was. Carter had eventually
turned up info indicating that Nathan Blackhawk had bounced around
a bit until he wound up in Chicago, where he’d done a few years in
juvie, and a few more in Greenville for grand theft auto. Since
then, he seemed to have gone straight, moving to Denver and
launching a small but successful computer gaming company.
And he’d ducked every one of Strike’s
calls.
‘‘I’m going to have to go there in person.’’
Strike grimaced and looked around. ‘‘There’s a shitload left to be
done before this place is workable.’’
They’d made some progress, granted. The
kidney-shaped pool had been pumped, scrubbed, resealed, and filled,
and the subcontractor had installed a new filter system and
creepy-crawly pool cleaner. The pool area, a seventies-era cement
deck that was pretty low on the priority list for updating, was
surrounded by the mansion on three sides. The fourth side was open,
with a view of the traditional ball court the Nightkeepers had used
to blow off steam, and occasionally for ceremonial games. The two
high parallel stone walls, with a single stone hoop set some twenty
feet up on either side, had stood the test of time pretty well, as
had the ‘‘real’’ ball courts in the Yucatán and Central America.
Pretty much everything else in the training compound was in tough
shape, though.
The plumbing, electricals, and carpets in the
mansion were being gutted and redone, and they’d made the decision
to tear the barn down and start over with a steel-span building,
rather than trying to salvage the sagging wreck. They would use the
space not for horses and mules for pack trips into the backcountry,
as before, but for what Jox was dubbing Magic 101—on the theory
that it’d be best to unleash the untrained magi in a fireproof
space.
‘‘Go to Denver,’’ Jox said, waving him off.
‘‘Admit it—you’re dying to get away from this place. Too many
memories.’’
‘‘For all of us.’’ Strike couldn’t deny that he
was edgy being back in the compound. There were ghosts in every
room of every building, and around every corner. In the aftermath
of the massacre he’d made it a point not to think about his life
before, and over the years those memories had faded. Now, triggered
by each sight and smell, they’d returned with a vengeance.
His father had loved baseball. How had he
forgotten that? Scarred-Jaguar had taught Strike to switch-hit, and
had pounded fungoes for fielding practice. They’d watched the
Rangers on TV, and took weekend trips twice a year for back-to-back
games at Arlington Stadium.
And his mother . . . his mother had been thin and
elegant, with close-cropped dark hair and a core of steel, wearing
a warrior’s mark in her own right. Yet she’d been the one to kiss
his skinned knees and make them better. She’d nearly fainted at the
sight of his scalp split open when he’d fallen from the pueblo
ruins at the back of the compound, after trying to make it up to
the walled-off kiva on a dare. How had he forgotten any of those
things?
‘‘It hasn’t been fun for any of us,’’ Strike
said. ‘‘Don’t think I haven’t seen you turn a funny color now and
then, and Red-Boar . . . well, you know.’’
The older Nightkeeper had withdrawn even more,
shutting himself away in the four-room house behind the mansion
where he’d lived with his family before the massacre. Rabbit lived
in the second bedroom of the small cottage, helping with the demo
when he felt like it, and spending the rest of the time sitting
high up in the pueblo ruins with his iPod.
The four of them were farther apart than they’d
ever been before, which made Strike wonder how great a leader he
was going to be if he couldn’t even manage the team spirit of one
winikin along with a zonked-out Nightkeeper
and his half-blood son.
‘‘Your father was a good king,’’ Jox said, as if
he knew Strike needed the reassurance. ‘‘In some ways you’re very
like him; you walk the same, and the way you fill the room just by
being in it, that’s the same. That’s genetics, and the blood-magic.
But in other ways you’re not alike at all; you question yourself
and others around you far more than he ever did, and you’re more a
man of today than he was of his time. That’s environment, I think.
Nature versus nurture. He was raised knowing every single day of
his life who he was and where he fit within his people. He was
taught to lead, and his warriors were taught to be led.’’
Strike grimaced. ‘‘Not exactly the situation
we’ve got now.’’
‘‘Blood tells,’’ Jox said. ‘‘You’re your father’s
son. You’ll find a way.’’
‘‘I’d better, or none of this is going to matter
in a few years. Or, hell, a few months.’’ There was no doubt in his
mind that when the fall equinox came in just under eleven weeks,
the ajaw-makol was going to try to bring a
Banol Kax through the barrier, thus
triggering the thirteenth prophecy by bringing a dark lord to earth
in the final five years before the zero date.
That was assuming they didn’t find a way to
neutralize the creature first. Since they didn’t have an itza’at seer to track the evil, they’d had to
improvise. He’d asked the investigator, Carter, to get all the
background info possible on the man Leah had known as Zipacna, and
his Survivor2012 group. According to the PI, the 2012ers hadn’t
seen their leader since the solstice, and when Strike had
teleported Red-Boar to their group’s head-quarters, neither of them
had detected makol magic from within,
suggesting that the bastard was in the wind.
Carter was watching for Zipacna to reappear, and
the PI was tracking bulk purchases of several rare ingredients
necessary to the magic of the Banol Kax.
Hopefully, one of those lines of investigation would lead them to
the ajaw-makol.
In the meantime, Strike had a fighting force to
assemble.
He said, ‘‘We don’t have arrival info for the
eagle, stone, or harvester bloodlines, but I spoke with their
winikin, who’ve promised to get their
Nightkeepers here by the first of next month at the absolute latest
. . . which is cutting it close.’’
Although the barrier was most active during each
solstice and equinox, other conjunctions could be used for
ceremonies if necessary. The next one on the calendar was the
aphelion, which fell, ironically, on the Fourth of July. Strike and
Red-Boar were planning to use that day to jack in the new trainees
and get them their bloodline marks, and their first taste of power.
That’d give them a little over two months to cram in an entire
childhood of magic theory before the next ceremonial day, the Venus
conjunction, when they’d perform the talent ceremony that would
give the newbies their talent marks and increase the Nightkeepers’
ranks from two to lucky thirteen.
After the Venus conjunction, they would have a
scant nine days until the fall equinox, when the ajaw-makol was most likely to make his move, and
when the skyroad connecting the heavens and earth would once again
open up, providing the Nightkeepers an opportunity to bring a god
to earth and create a Godkeeper.
Again, in theory.
‘‘The trainees will be here in time,’’ Jox said.
‘‘Their winikin won’t let you down.’’ His
tone indicated that they’d better damn well not. He held out a
hand. ‘‘Give me the list. I’ll make a few more calls and see about
tracking down the stragglers.’’
They hadn’t been able to contact the last two
winikin. The star twins’ winikin wasn’t returning calls, and the serpent
boy’s winikin was nowhere to be
found.
‘‘Sounds like a plan.’’ Strike rose. ‘‘And do me
a favor? See if you can get Rabbit interested in the construction
projects. I don’t like how much time he’s spending by
himself.’’
‘‘Like father, like son.’’ But Jox nodded. ‘‘I’ll
see what I can do.’’
‘‘Thanks.’’ Strike paused. ‘‘I guess I’ve got a
date in Denver, then.’’ Not like he was going to make an
appointment. Nathan Blackhawk was in for a surprise.
‘‘Make sure that’s where you go.’’ Jox fixed him
with a look. ‘‘No detours.’’
‘‘Shit.’’ Strike scowled at his winikin. ‘‘You sure you’re not an itza’at?’’
‘‘Doesn’t take a seer to know you’ve got a woman
on your mind, and it doesn’t take a genius to figure out which one.
Remember, ‘The king’s duty is to the gods above all others, then to
his people; all else comes after,’ ’’ the winikin said, quoting from the writs. He paused,
then said, ‘‘Red-Boar and I talked about this some. His theory is
that the dreams came from the barrier as it was reactivating. In
the last few months before a mage hits puberty, the hormones go
totally wonky. Since you didn’t get your talent mark back when you
were a teenager, there’s a good chance all those hormones got
packed into a few weeks once Zipacna’s sacrifices thinned the
barrier enough that the magic started to leak through.’’
‘‘I’ve heard Red-Boar’s wet-dream theory,’’
Strike muttered. ‘‘That’s not what it was.’’
‘‘You’ve always had a thing for blue-eyed blondes
with a bit of an edge to them. Is there any wonder that’s what your
subconscious fixed on?’’
‘‘I didn’t see just any blue-eyed blonde. I saw
Leah.’’
‘‘The mind can play tricks.’’ The winikin laid a hand on his shoulder, a fatherly
gesture that irked the shit right out of him. ‘‘Five of the
survivors are female, including the twins.’’
Strike gritted his teeth. ‘‘Matchmaking,
Jox?’’
The winikin didn’t bother
looking ashamed. ‘‘Matebonded Nightkeepers are stronger together
than they are apart. You’d serve your people better to choose one
of your own kind.’’
Thoroughly annoyed, and halfway wishing his
father had been a dogcatcher or something, Strike pushed himself to
his feet. ‘‘I’ll call you from Denver.’’
Nathan Blackhawk scowled as he scanned his laptop
screen. Handheld computer sales were up, indicating that the gamers
had latched on to the upgraded pod, which gave players near VR
quality control over their characters. Problem was, the games
themselves weren’t showing the same spike, whereas his competitors’
products were flying off the shelves.
‘‘Goddamn violent-ass kids,’’ he muttered under
his breath, spinning in his chair and glaring at his office walls,
which were painted the same glossy black as his furniture. ‘‘They’d
rather blow shit up than use their brains.’’
It didn’t escape him that he’d been exactly that
sort of kid until a stint in juvie and a social worker who hadn’t
taken ‘‘fuck off and die’’ as an answer had set him more or less
straight. But it probably served him right for thinking he could
change the thought process of an entire generation with the physics
of extreme sports and a handful of quest sagas that contained far
more actual history than your average LOTR rip-off.
It’d taken balls—and admittedly a bit of
bloodless disregard—to leave the software company that’d given him
his start, promoting him to developer despite his lack of a formal
degree. It’d taken even more testicular fortitude to hire a bunch
of nobodies like himself and call the whole mess a software gaming
company, but he’d made it work; for the first three years Hawk
Enterprises had made obscene amounts of money selling the same sort
of bloodthirsty pap the rest of the industry spewed out. When
Nathan had started tweaking things a year ago, though, sales hadn’t
kept up, and now the frigging profit-and-loss charts were looking
grim.
‘‘Hey, boss?’’ A quick knock on the door frame
followed Denjie’s hail. Before Nathan could answer—or not—the
sandy-haired programmer, rotund and wearing tight black jeans, an
obscene concert T-shirt, and electric blue-framed glasses, stuck
his head through the door.
Nate held up a hand before Den could start. ‘‘I
know, I know. I’ll have a decision for you on the new blood’n’
-guts slasherfest by this afternoon.’’
The programmer drew himself up to his full
five-seven. ‘‘If you’re referring to EmoPunk
III, then I’m not sure why there’s any question in your puny
excuse for a brain. EP3 is going to be a
freakin’ best seller.’’
‘‘It’s also freakin’ nasty, and guaranteed to
curdle the gray matter of anyone stupid enough to play it.’’
‘‘Which is why it’s going to outsell the shit out
of your pathetic Viking Warrior franchise,
and do double the numbers of all the celebrity skateboarder VRs
combined. But that’s not why I’m in here.’’ Den hooked a thumb over
his shoulder. ‘‘Guy’s here to see you.’’
Nate frowned. ‘‘What guy?’’
‘‘Dunno. Dark hair, cool tats. He buzzed from
downstairs, said he had an appointment. I put him in the conference
room.’’
‘‘I don’t have any—’’ Nate broke off as Den
ducked out again, clearly not giving a shit whether or not the
guy’s story was true. ‘‘Damn it.’’
Nate knew he really ought to get a receptionist,
someone who’d help him organize things and run interference. But
he’d never bothered, mostly because their games were sold under the
aegis of a bigger company, which meant that Hawk Enterprises flew
pretty far under the radars of most gaming crazies, leaving them
relatively unmolested.
That, and the fact that he liked to do things his
way, all the way.
The bad news was that the lack of a receptionist
meant he was sometimes ambushed by ambitious low-level developers,
along with the occasional wacko who wanted to meet Hera, the
stacked blond heroine from the Viking
Warrior games. Not to mention that he got to personally field
the weird-ass phone calls, like the one he’d gotten the week before
from some guy who claimed to have information about Nate’s parents.
Yeah, like he’d never heard that one before.
The good news about having no receptionist,
though, was that it left him free to ignore people until they went
away. He seriously considered doing exactly that with the guy in
the conference room, but since his other options seemed limited to
P&L statements or going over the EP3
projections again, he climbed to his feet and headed for the
conference room.
The offices of Hawk Enterprises took up the front
quarter of a warehouse, with the rest of the building left open for
real-time modeling of X-stunts using VR suits and the semipermanent
half-pipes and ramps they’d built with some of the early money. At
the moment, most of the pending projects were either in the
conception phase or final testing, so the stunt area was deserted.
That was a relief, because it could get damn loud back there when
the adrenaline junkies got the music blasting and started trying to
outdo one another.
Bypassing the break room—no way he was offering
his uninvited guest coffee until he knew what the guy wanted—Nate
headed down a short corridor to the conference room.
Whereas the developers had each done up their own
offices—ranging from Nate’s all-black to Glitch’s ode to Battlestar Galactica—the conference room looked
pretty normal. The same could not be said for the man who stood
staring through the floor-length windows overlooking the half-pipe
in the warehouse beyond. He was six-five if he was an inch, with
long black hair dropping to his massive shoulders and features that
looked like they belonged in Viking Warrior 5:
Odin’s Return. He was wearing black cargo pants, scarred
lace-up boots, and a wide webbed utility belt, with a white
button-down shirt that saved the look from being straight out of
military-surplus -goes-Goth. Barely.
The stranger turned and took a long look that
made Nate feel as though he were being judged, or maybe weighed.
‘‘You’re Nathan Blackhawk,’’ the guy said. It wasn’t a
question.
‘‘And you’re trespassing,’’ Nate replied, more or
less pleasantly. ‘‘Lucky for you I’m in a good mood. You’ve got
five minutes.’’
‘‘That’ll do.’’ The stranger shot his cuffs,
unbuttoned one, and bared his right forearm to reveal four
black-ink tattoos: a stylized leopard’s head of some sort, along
with three unfamiliar symbols that stirred something deep inside
Nate.
‘‘Nice ink,’’ he said casually, wondering if he
should call Denjie in, or maybe the cops. This guy was registering
pretty high on the freak-o-meter.
‘‘Ever seen anything like it?’’
‘‘Should I have?’’
‘‘Where’d you get the chain?’’ the stranger
asked, jerking his chin at Nate’s chest. ‘‘The hawk
medallion.’’
‘‘None of your goddamn business,’’ Nate said,
trying to keep it on the level, though the pucker factor was rising
quickly. ‘‘You’re down to four minutes and you’re bugging me. I’d
suggest you state your business or go away.’’
‘‘I need to talk to you about your
parents.’’
The single sentence, the dream of so many kids in
the foster system, shot through him on a sizzle of anger. He
pointed to the door. ‘‘Get. Out.’’
‘‘Or not.’’ The stranger moved suddenly, grabbing
Nate’s wrist.
The battle rage of Nate’s youth rose fast and
hard, and he twisted away and swung a punch. The stranger dodged,
got his wrist again, and barked out a word.
And everything went gray-green.
Nate howled and flailed, and suddenly they were
outside on the warehouse roof. Scratch that; they were five feet
above the warehouse roof for a second
before they fell, slamming down in a heap. The stranger recovered
first, mostly because Nate felt like he was about to barf up a
lung. The guy dragged Nate up, got him halfway over the edge of the
roof, and held him there by the front of his shirt. ‘‘Are you ready
to listen to me yet?’’
Nate didn’t answer. He gaped. ‘‘How . . . what .
. . ?’’ The stranger nodded, cobalt blue eyes gleaming with
satisfaction and something else, something that glittered gold for
a moment, then was gone. He reached into the breast pocket of his
button-down shirt, withdrew a card, and tucked it into Nate’s shirt
pocket. ‘‘Call this number when you’re ready to hear what I have to
say. Better yet, just show up at that address. We’ll explain, and
we’ll show you how to use the power that’s in your blood.’’ He
shook his head. ‘‘Bad luck, you losing your protector so young.
We’ve got someone lined up for you, a man named Carlos. He’ll get
you up to speed.’’
‘‘Screw you,’’ Nate snapped. ‘‘I have a business
to run.’’
Okay, so maybe that was just about the dumbest
possible response to being teleported and hung halfway off the side
of his own roof, but he was pretty rattled.
‘‘Your games won’t matter worth shit four years
from now unless you help us out.’’ The stranger cocked his head.
‘‘You want to save the world? You’re not going to do it with
history lectures disguised as video games.’’
‘‘And I suppose you’re going to tell me how I
am?’’
‘‘You bet your ass.’’ The stranger tapped the
card. ‘‘Call me.’’ Then he pulled Nate in, away from the edge, and
sent him stumbling across the roof.
When Nate turned back, the other man was
gone.
Exhausted and nursing the beginnings of a hell of
a postmagic hangover—though the shock value had been way worth
it—Strike headed for the parking lot outside Blackhawk’s converted
warehouse, where he’d parked the lame-ass minivan he’d rented
rather than risking a series of teleports he was nowhere near ready
to navigate.
He was getting better at ’porting, which required
him to picture either a person or a place as a destination. If he
thought of a person, the travel thread would appear and take him to
their location. If he thought of a place, the thread took him
there. He could zap someplace he’d never been based on a photo, but
had to be careful about being seen. More, he had to be absolutely
certain that he pictured his destination accurately, or he could
get his ass stuck halfway between, or worse. Ergo, he was being
stingy with his teleports . . . except that the stunt he’d just
pulled with Blackhawk, thinking ‘‘roof’’ and getting there,
suggested the power stretched farther than any of them
suspected.
He wasn’t ready to see how far he could push it,
though. Thus, the minivan. Once he was in the car, he phoned
home.
Jox picked up the call on the fourth ring, and
after they’d done the hey, how are you
thing, asked, ‘‘How’d it go with Blackhawk?’’
‘‘We’ll see. He’s going to be tough. Wanted
nothing to do with me at first.’’ Strike popped on his cell phone’s
headset, cranked the engine, and headed for his next appointment,
which was in a seriously seedy part of the city.
Carter had finally tracked down the last
winikin, servant to the serpent bloodline .
. . in a mental institution. Through him, the investigator had
managed to find the grown Nightkeeper child, also in Denver. The
coincidence of two survivors both winding up in the same city had
given Strike a bad vibe, as had Snake Mendez himself when he’d
gotten the guy on the phone.
Seriously bad vibes. Like pack a MAC and some jade-tips bad. Which might’ve
had something to do with Carter’s mentioning an outstanding arrest
warrant for assault and battery.
‘‘You change his mind?’’ Jox asked about
Blackhawk.
‘‘Either that or I scared the ever-living shit
out of him,’’ Strike admitted. ‘‘I sort of zapped him onto the roof
and dangled him over the side.’’
‘‘Don’t worry, he’ll show. The hawk bloodline has
too much magic and ego for him to blow it off.’’ The doorbell
chimed in the background, and Jox said, ‘‘Hang on; someone’s here.
Let me just—’’ He broke off, and then said, ‘‘Hannah.’’
And the line went dead.
Jox saw her through the wiggly glass panel beside
the front door—just a glimpse, then gone as she reached for the
doorbell and rang it a second time. It might’ve been anyone—anyone
female, at least—but he knew it was her. Maybe it was the way she
moved, maybe the bright colors she was wearing—strong purples and
reds and greens. Or maybe it was just wishful thinking. But there
wasn’t an iota of doubt in his brain. Hannah had come.
So why, exactly, was he still standing there like
he’d grown roots?
‘‘No real reason,’’ he muttered, and forced his
feet to unstick. He crossed the foyer and opened the door as she
was aiming for doorbell ring number three. ‘‘Why are you ringing?’’
Jox said. ‘‘This is your home as much as—’’
He broke off as she turned to him, and he saw
that the jade green scarf she wore tied around her head was more
necessity than fashion statement, dipping across her forehead at an
angle and covering her left eye and ear. From beneath the lower
edge of the scarf, parallel scars trailed across her cheek and the
side of her neck. Six of them.
‘‘Hullo, Jox,’’ she said.
‘‘Hannah.’’ Those damn roots were at it again; he
couldn’t move. He told himself to just step up, and hug her, for
gods’ sake. They’d been friends. Hell, he’d kissed her. Twenty-four
years ago, but it still counted, right?
Only that’d been before. After, they’d said that night, and dared to make
plans. Except now it was after, and nothing had gone as they’d
hoped. He wanted to say he was sorry, wanted to tell her he still
sometimes dreamed about that night, when he’d heard her scream and
ran the other way. He wanted to let her know that he’d cried when
he’d realized she’d made it out with the baby. He wanted to tell
her that he’d carried her address with him for nearly a decade
before finally acknowledging that he was never going to call. But
the roots had spread up to his tongue, and he couldn’t get the
words out. Just stood there staring like a moron.
Her good eye, which had been soft and hopeful
when he’d opened the door, slowly darkened with disappointment. Her
lips turned down, farther on one side than the other because of the
scars. She glanced back toward the parking area, like she might
head back to her car and take off, but then she squared her
shoulders beneath her brightly printed floral shirt and stared him
down. ‘‘Awful, isn’t it?’’
‘‘No,’’ he said, but it came out too weak.
‘‘Hannah, no. Never.’’ He moved toward her, but it was too
late.
She stepped back on the pretext of bending to
pick up her duffel—it was black with turquoise and pink flowers—and
slung the strap over her shoulder. ‘‘Where to?’’
‘‘You’re the first to arrive,’’ he said, finally
getting his tongue unglued from the roof of his mouth. ‘‘Where’s .
. . I guess calling her ‘the baby’ doesn’t work anymore.’’
That got a smile out of her. ‘‘She’d kick your
butt for trying. My Patience teaches martial arts. She’s a real
warrior.’’
‘‘Now that’s good news. Where is she?’’
‘‘She’ll be here.’’ Hannah sagged a little under
the weight of the duffel, but when he moved to take it she shook
her head. ‘‘I’m fine. Just point me to a bedroom and I’ll
unload.’’
He waved to the mansion at large. ‘‘Take your
pick. We stripped the rooms and redid the walls and floors, so
you’ve got your choice between drywall and carpet or drywall and
hardwood, but you can tap the fund for paint and whatever. Just
grab a room and have at it.’’
‘‘Are you in your father’s quarters?’’
‘‘Yeah, I . . . yeah.’’ It’d been beyond
difficult to move into the three-room apartment, but it made the
most sense, given its proximity to the royal suite. Of course, that
was before Strike moved into the pool house, unable to stay in his
parents’ quarters—or anywhere else in the mansion, for that matter.
Which had made Jox’s room choice sort of pointless.
Hannah gave an of course you
did nod. ‘‘Then I’ll take one of the singles in the winikin’s wing.’’
‘‘You don’t have to,’’ he protested. ‘‘There’s
room for all of us in the main building.’’
‘‘It wouldn’t feel right. You, of all people,
should know that.’’
‘‘What’s that supposed to mean?’’
‘‘Nothing bad.’’ She closed the distance between
them and lifted a hand to cup his cheek. She smiled at him, and the
expression was a touch sad, but it stripped away the years and the
scars, and he could see the girl he’d known. ‘‘Only that your sense
of propriety was too bone-deep to have changed, even after all this
time.’’ Without waiting for an answer, she brushed past him and
headed for the hall leading to the winikin’s wing.
Jox cursed under his breath. That had so not gone
the way he’d planned. He should follow her. He should ask for a
do-over, ask if he could give her a hug, a kiss— hell, a kidney. He
was halfway across the sunken great room, headed to do just that,
when the phone rang.
He hesitated. Told himself to ignore it, to do
what he wanted for a change rather than what he was supposed to do.
He made it two more steps. . . .
Then he cursed, detoured to the kitchen, and
grabbed the ringing phone. ‘‘Jox here.’’
‘‘It’s Carver,’’ the PI said. ‘‘I found the last
two.’’
Jox closed his eyes. He’d found the twins.
Thank the gods. ‘‘Where are they?’’
‘‘Dead.’’